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Honeybees are flying insects, and close relatives of wasps and ants. They are found on every continent on earth, except for Antarctica.
Bees of all varieties live on nectar and pollen. Without bees, pollination would be difficult and time consuming - it is estimated that one-third of the human food supply depends on insect pollination. Bees have a long, straw-like tongue called a probiscus that allows them to drink the nectar from deep within blossoms. Bees are also equipped with two wings, two antennae, and three segmented body parts (the head, the thorax, and the abdomen). Honeybees are social insects that live in colonies. The hive population consists of a single queen, a few hundred drones, and thousands of worker bees.
The honeybees we know and love here at Honeybee Centre forage for nectar and pollen from flowering plants. They use the nectar collected to create our favourite sweet treat - honey! When carrying the nectar back to the hive, their bodies break down the complex sucrose of the nectar into two simple sugars, fructose and glucose. Tucking it neatly into a honeycomb cell, the bees will then beat their wings furiously over top of this syrupy sweet liquid to fan out the moisture and thicken the substance. When it is complete, the bees will cap that cell with beeswax, sealing the perfected honey for consumption later on.
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Bees of all varieties live on nectar and pollen. Without bees, pollination would be difficult and time consuming - it is estimated that one-third of the human food supply depends on insect pollination. Bees have a long, straw-like tongue called a probiscus that allows them to drink the nectar from deep within blossoms. Bees are also equipped with two wings, two antennae, and three segmented body parts (the head, the thorax, and the abdomen). Honeybees are social insects that live in colonies. The hive population consists of a single queen, a few hundred drones, and thousands of worker bees.
The honeybees we know and love here at Honeybee Centre forage for nectar and pollen from flowering plants. They use the nectar collected to create our favourite sweet treat - honey! When carrying the nectar back to the hive, their bodies break down the complex sucrose of the nectar into two simple sugars, fructose and glucose. Tucking it neatly into a honeycomb cell, the bees will then beat their wings furiously over top of this syrupy sweet liquid to fan out the moisture and thicken the substance. When it is complete, the bees will cap that cell with beeswax, sealing the perfected honey for consumption later on.
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The honey bee, also known as the European honey bee or the Western honey bee, lives in many countries around the world. Kids with an interest in honey bees can learn about their roles, behavior and reproductive patterns. As a natural pollinator for flowers, fruits and vegetables, the honey bee plays an important role in agriculture.Honey bees are very sociable, living in large groups, known as colonies. Each type of honey bee, such as a queen bee, drone and worker bee, has a different role within the colony.Of all the facts about bees, the most well-known one is probably that they produce honey. This creates the food stores their colony needs to survive the winter. However, bees produce a lot more honey than they need, and the surplus ends up in jars on your supermarket shelves for you to enjoy. Honey bees are very fast insects, flying at a speed of about 25 km per hour and beating their wings about 200 times per second. Honey bees also have a great sense of smell, which they use to differentiate between types of flowers when foraging for food, and to communicate within the colony.
The queen bee is the only fertile bee, and she lays hundreds of eggs per day and over 2,500 eggs per day at the height of summer. The queen bee, who can live for up to five years, also produces chemicals that influence the behavior of other bees. For example, she can stop worker bees from producing eggs.
Worker or female bees do whatever is necessary to keep the hive operating smoothly, such as bringing food like pollen and nectar from flowers to the queen bee, protecting the hive from predators and cleaning the air inside the hive by beating their wings. A worker bee only lives for about five to six weeks, during which time she produces about a twelfth of a teaspoon of honey.
The queen bee is the only fertile bee, and she lays hundreds of eggs per day and over 2,500 eggs per day at the height of summer. The queen bee, who can live for up to five years, also produces chemicals that influence the behavior of other bees. For example, she can stop worker bees from producing eggs.
Worker or female bees do whatever is necessary to keep the hive operating smoothly, such as bringing food like pollen and nectar from flowers to the queen bee, protecting the hive from predators and cleaning the air inside the hive by beating their wings. A worker bee only lives for about five to six weeks, during which time she produces about a twelfth of a teaspoon of honey.
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